Watson v. Barber
Watson v. Barber
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
(Original decree of this court set aside bn rehearing.)
Statement of ti-ie Case.
Nicholls, O. J. The plaintiff asks judgment against the Succession of Thomas Barber for the sum of two thousand eight hundred and fifty dollars,with legal interest. His demand, is based upon allegations that for a number of years, and particularly from the year 1889, the said Thomas Barber had considerable property and business interest in the parish of Morehouse; that in the year 1889,Barber employed him to keep his books, accounts, and make all settlements and calculations for him, ship and settle for all cottons, manage his gin and grist mill, which did business, not only for Barber individually, but for the public, and also his mercantile business, and keep all books and to manage generally all of his
In the event the court should decide that there was no contract, as alleged, petitioner averred that during said years he faithfully performed all of said services continuously for Barber, and that they were fully worth the sum of ■ twenty-eight hundred and fifty dollars, from January 1st, 1890, to the death of Barber; that Barber was old and illiterate, and said services performed by petitioner for him were valuable and indispensable, and Barber could not have conducted and managed his business had he not received the benefit of the services of petitionr.
Defendant filed an exception of the prescription of one, three and five years in. bar of plaintiff’s action, and under reservation of same answered. After pleading the general issue, • she averred that plaintiff was a foster son of Thomas Barber, who raised him from an infant and supported and maintained him and his family up to the time of his (Barber’s) death; that plaintiff was forty or fifty years old, was the father of a large family, had never been successful, but always in debí, always prodigal and extravagant; that both he and his family had always been pensioners on Barber’s charity and received liberally of his bounty; that, notwithstanding these facts, Barber from time to time made valuable donations to plaintiff, especially the donation of the gin property and improvements, worth at least fifteen hundred ($1500) dollars, and that all these things considered, plaintiff’s demands showed the height of ingratitude and avarice, and had no foundation in fact, law or good conscience. That, instead of her being indebted unto plaintiff, he was largely indebted unto her as administratrix of Thomas Barber’s Succession; and, assuming the position of plaintiff in reconvention, she averred:
That Woodley Watson, plaintiff, was justly and legally indebted unto her as administratrix of the Succession of Thomas Barber in and for the full sum and amount of eight hundred and forty-nine dollars and ninety-nine cents ($849.99), at five per cent, interest on $527.49 thereof, from the — day of-, 189 — , till paid, and two per cent, interest on $422.50 thereof from February 3rd, 1896, till paid, for this, to-wit: That Woodley Watson was indebted unto the Bastrop
She prayed that plaintiff’s demand be rejected, for judgment in reconvention, with the right reserved to proceed on the mortgage note when it matured.
Plaintiff excepted to the reconventional demand on the ground that both plaintiff and defendant resided in the same parish, and the reconventional demand did not grow out of nor was it necessarily connected with the demands set up by plaintiff.
In view of the premises plaintiff prayed that the said reconventional demand be stricken out and rejected, and for general relief.
The court rendered judgment against the paintiff, and he appealed.
Opinion.
The plaintiff sues upon an alleged verbal contract with Thomas Barber, for services to be rendered by him to Thomas Barber at a fixed salary of three hundred dollars per year. The contract is averred to have been made in 1889 and services rendered under it until the death of Barber in 1899. Annexed to plaintiff’s petition is an account in which a charge or claim is made for three hundred dollars per year for each of the intervening years. The defendant denies the existence of any claim and asserts that whatever services were rendered were gratuitous and such as would naturally be performed without pay by one who had been taken into the family of another and reared by him as a member practically of his family. She maintains that Barber, by reason of such relations, extended to the plaintiff kindnesses and benefits that would more than requite him for anything which he had done. She pleads the prescription of one, two, three and five years. She further claims that during the period for which the plaintiff claims a salary he
A branch of this case will be found reported in 52 Ann. 957 (Succession of Barber). Plaintiff seeks to ward off the effect of the prescription pleaded, by urging that his services were continuous, and he did not exact payment because he had been led to believe that he would be remunerated for his services in the will of Barber. Pie evidently relies upon the line of decisions commencing with the Succession of Fowler. 7 Ann. 778, and extending down to Succession of McNamara, 48 Ann. 45. These decisions were referred to and cited in Adams vs. The Succession of Mills, 49 Ann. 779, in which attention was called to the change which had been made in the law of prescription by the present Article 2278 of the Civil Code, and the statute on which the change iu that article was based. The plaintiff does not sue upon a quantum, meruit or an implied contract, but upon an express contract with annual stops. In the Adams case, in the 49th Annual, referring to plaintiff’s claim, we said: “It is not claimed that either prior to or as the services were being rendered there was any agreement or understanding that plaintiff’s services were to be compensated, still less that the value or manner or time of payment thereof had been fixed. Pie relies upon the vaguest kind of declarations of Mrs. Mills after the alleged services were rendered that she was under obligations to him which she would remember and recognize in her will. * . * * The parole evidence tendered by plaintiff was not to establish a contract which, by its special terms at its inception, was of a character such as to withdraw it fromthe prescription ordinarily applicable to contracts of that kind. What he attempted to do was to prove that services, which as to their payment would be prescribed by three years, had been taken out of such prescription and thrown under that of five or ten years by a subsequent promise or acknowledgment.”
These remarks, to some extent, find application here. Viewing'plaintiff’s claim as arising under an express contract his right of action accrued at the end of each year and would be prescribed accordingly. The demand of the plaintiff for remuneration for services rendered prior to the three years preceding the death of Thomas Barber are prescribed, and are so decreed to be. Plaintiff does not pretend that there was any agreement between himself and Barber that the term of payment of his claim should be extended to the period of the latter’s death, or that the
The plaintiff, instead of waiting until the defendant had sued him upon his notes and then pleading in compensation, has taken the initiative and brought suit directly upon his own alleged claims declaring upon an express contract. The defendant, instead of pleading compensation, has filed a plea in reconvention. The court has said nothing about the latter demand. The defendant has not appealed nor asked any amendment.
The court, we think, has offset the two demands which the parties have presented against each other. It did not pass on the plea of prescription. We think the plaintiff had a claim to some extent against the defendant, subject to a settlement of the claim which the succession had against him. We think he has no reason to complain of the judgment as rendered. If there be error, it' is certainly not against him. The judgment appealed from is affirmed, the right of parties in relation to plaintiff’s mortgage note (which, though referred to in the pleadings and evidence, was not declared upon by the defendant in reeonvention) being expressly reserved.’
070rehearing
A rehearing was granted in this case for the reason that our attention was called to the fact, which the court had overlooked, that the plaintiff had excepted to the reconvenional demand filed by the defendant, on the ground that it was not connected with or incidental to the main demand, and that exception had been maintained and the reconventional demand was dismissed. The mistake arose from the fact that the action of the District Court on that subject appeared only in the stenographer’s note of evidence and not in the minutes, and that, notwithstanding this entry, the same notes showed later the introduction' of evidence, over repeated objections of plaintiff, upon the matters which had been made the subject of the reconvention, and they were also very fully discussed in the argument of the case. Acting upon the assumption that the District Court had passed upon the reconventional demand, we construed the judgment rendered by it to have held the demands of the plaintiff and those of the defendant to have offset each other, and as the defendant did not appeal and asked no amendment of judgment, we affirmed the judgment, remarking, however, that if there was error therein, it was not to the prejudice of the plaintiff. We recognized, however, that the services which plaintiff had rendered were not gratuitous, and that he was entitled to remuneration to some extent. We did not attempt, under our view of the situation, to fix any amount for the same. ■ We are satisfied that the court did not act upon the reconvention, notwithstanding the fact of the introduction of evidence upon the claims. Plaintiff insists that-the court must have “reconsidered” its action dismissing the reconvention, but there is nothing in the record to support the argument other than the fact itself of the introduction of the testimony over plaintiff’s objections. There is some inconsistency in plaintiff’s insisting that the reconvention was before the court, in view of the fact that he maintained throughout (shown by his pleadings and exceptions) that it could not be legally considered.
We think the evidence was introduced by the defendant, not for the purpose of obtaining a judgment upon the reconventional demand, but by showing the existence of the claims advanced therein to argue from that fact the great want of probability of the coexistence with them of any claims of the plaintiff against Barber. For that particular purpose and to that extent the evidence was relevant, and it was for that purpose undoubtedly offered and permitted to be introduced.
We adhere to the conclusion announced in our original opinion, that the plaintiff is entitled to some remuneration, notwithstanding the fact' of the close relations which existed between him and Barber from the former’s early childhood. The latter himself recognized that when the plaintiff reached his majority and had special responsibilities of his own thrown upon him, he was entitled to compensation for services which took up so great a portion of his time as did those he was then rendering. He therefore agreed to pay him three hundred dollars a year. At that time and for some time after Barber owned a store, of which Watson had charge; he also had a couple of small places, calling for some special clerical and other work. Matters did not remain in that condition. Watson himself bought the store from Barber, and conducted it on his own account and his services afterwards more nearly approached those which would be expected from a member of Barber’s family than they had. As there was, however, no evidence of any expressed alteration in the understanding that he should be paid,' we thought that matters should not be placed upon a changed footing in that respect; but we none the less recognized the fact that the original agreed salary of three hundred dollars a year could not be taken as a continuing standard of the value of the plaintiff’s services, in view of their extent having been so greatly reduced. Watson himself testifies that when he asked Barber for remuneration upon that valuation, he objected and became violently angry, so much so that he discontinued his services altogether, substituting his stepdaughter in plaintiff’s place.' We think it quite likely that the plaintiff had some expectation, and, perhaps, a reasonable expectation, that Barber might provide for him in his will, and that but for that expectation he might not have been as willing as he was to continue his services, but that view of the matter does not control the legal situation at all. The plaintiff urges that there is very strong evidence in the record as to the extent and value of his services up to the death of Barber. We do not give the testimony he refers to the same probative force which he does.
The witnesses did not pretend to have any personal knowledge of the details of plaintiff’s duties and services. Their knowledge was of a very general and indefinite character and referred besides to a great extent to services rendered.years back. Plaintiff received from Barber up to
For the reasons assigned it is ordered, adjudged and decreed that our 'original decree herein be and the same is set aside, and it is now ordered and adjudged that plaintiff, Woodley Watson, do have and recover judgment against defendant, the Succession of Thomas Barber, for the sum of two hundred dollars, with the costs in both courts'.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Woodley Watson v. Clara Barber, Administratrix
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Syllabus. Where the plaintiff sues upon an express contract upon which action accrued annually subject to the prescription of three years, a failure to institute the action for its enforcement within the period of prescription, bars the action, notwithstanding the fact that it was not brought by reason of an expectation and hope by the creditor that the debtor would malee testamentary dispositions in his favor sufficient to cover the claim. Verbal expressions of the debtor indicative merely of his intention to make a legacy in favor of the creditor, but not rising to the character of an agreement to postpone payment of the claim, does not suspend prescription. See Adams vs. Succession of Mills, 49 Ann. 775 ; Succession of Gaines, 45 Ann. 1434.